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Florida Justice Reform Institute

‘Not about putting a price on a life’: Sides collide on medical malpractice in Legislature

March 19, 2025/in Florida Health News

Health News Florida

Health News Florida | By Jim Saunders – News Service of Florida
Published March 19, 2025

A Senate committee approved a bill that would clear the way for more malpractice lawsuits over patient deaths.

On one side are people telling heart-wrenching stories about the deaths of their adult children or parents. On the other are people warning about shortages of doctors and soaring medical-malpractice insurance costs.

The two sides are colliding in the Florida Legislature, where a Senate committee Tuesday approved a bill that would change a decades-old law and clear the way for more malpractice lawsuits over patient deaths.

“The bill is about accountability, the value of life and ensuring our laws are just,” bill sponsor Clay Yarborough, R-Jacksonville, said moments before the Senate Health and Human Services Appropriations Committee voted 8-2 to approve the measure (SB 734).

But Sen. Gayle Harrell, a Stuart Republican who joined Sen. Colleen Burton, R-Lakeland, in voting against the bill, said “there are other ways to solve this problem without creating more problems in the system.” She and other opponents contend that high insurance costs drive doctors away from the state.

“We are desperately in need of physicians,” Harrell said. “If this bill passes, we are going to have an increase in medical malpractice (insurance rates). We are already the highest in the country, and it will continue.”

Proposals to change the 1990 law have surfaced periodically, but they could have more momentum this year. Yarborough’s bill has been approved by two committees, while a House version (HB 6017) has cleared one panel.

The bills involve wrongful-death lawsuits and what are known as “non-economic” damages for such things as pain and suffering.

They would undo part of the 1990 law that prevents people from seeking non-economic damages in certain circumstances. People who are 25 years old or older cannot seek such damages in medical-malpractice cases involving deaths of their parents. Also, parents cannot seek such damages in malpractice cases involving the deaths of their children who are 25 or older.

Numerous speakers have appeared at the Senate and House meetings to tell stories about how their parents or adult children died after medical malpractice — and an inability to pursue damages in the deaths.

Karen Aguilar said Tuesday her 87-year-old father died in January because of alleged negligence at a Pasco County hospital.

“Some argue that financial compensation cannot replace a loved one, and you’re correct,” Aguilar told senators. “But wrongful-death lawsuits are not about putting a price on a life. They are about ensuring accountability, deterring negligence and getting families a pathway to justice.”

But Andrew Bolin, an attorney who represents doctors and hospitals and spoke Tuesday on behalf of the business-backed Florida Justice Reform Institute, said clearing the way for more medical-malpractice lawsuits would worsen problems such as what he described as “OB deserts” — areas of the state that do not have obstetrical care.

“Non-profit hospitals have to stay open,” David Mica, a lobbyist for the Florida Hospital Association, told senators. “One-third of your rural hospitals in this state are operating at a negative margin.”

 

https://health.wusf.usf.edu/health-news-florida/2025-03-19/sides-collide-medical-malpractice-issue-florida-legislature-2025

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 Becky Lannon https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg Becky Lannon2025-03-19 20:03:222025-03-20 20:55:45‘Not about putting a price on a life’: Sides collide on medical malpractice in Legislature
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate Show Differences On COVID-19 Liability Bills

March 3, 2021/in Florida Health News

 

Health News Florida

House, Senate Show Differences On COVID-19 Liability Bills

Health News Florida | By Christine Sexton – News Service of Florida
Published March 3, 2021 at 7:50 AM EST

Jeff Brandes The Florida Channel

Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes says he plans to expand the Senate’sversion of
the business liability bill to include protections for health care providers.
Meantime, the
House has moved forward with separate proposals for businesses
and health care providers.

A House panel on Tuesday voted 12-6 to approve legislation that would protect nursing homes, assisted living facilities, hospitals and physicians from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

The push to fast-track legislation to protect Florida businesses from COVID-19 litigation continues to be bumpy.

While Tuesday was just the first day of the 2021 legislative session, Republicans in the House and Senate showed signs they continue to go in different directions on the sweeping proposals.

In January, GOP lawmakers released identical proposals to protect non-health care businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19 deaths or injuries.

But Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes on Tuesday told The News Service of Florida that he plans to expand the Senate’s version of the COVID-19 business liability bill (SB 72) to include protections for health care providers, such as nursing homes and assisted living facilities. Those protections have been contained in another bill (SB 74) — and the House has moved forward with separate proposals for general businesses and health care providers.

“I think the key is that we are focused on one singular issue,” Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, said, adding that he plans on rolling his proposals into one bill when the Senate Rules Committee considers the issue.

But that could prove controversial.

Among other things, the health care bill provides broad immunity protections, including providing immunity to nursing homes, assisted living facilities, hospitals and physicians if “supplies, materials, equipment, or personnel necessary to comply with the applicable government-issued health standards or guidance at issue were not readily available or were not available at a reasonable cost.”

The House’s proposed health care liability protections (HB 7005) do not include a similar provision. The House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee voted 12-6 to approve that bill Tuesday evening.

Meanwhile, the full House is scheduled Thursday to take up its version of the bill (HB 7) that would provide liability protections to non-health care businesses. It likely will be one of the first two bills to get approval from the House during this year’s session.

Brandes made his remarks after the Senate Commerce and Tourism Committee voted 7-4 along party lines to approve the Senate bill focused on non-health care businesses. Members of the committee debated — and shot down —a spate of amendments offered by Democrats, including several proposed by Sen. Jason Pizzo, D-North Miami Beach.

For example, one Pizzo amendment would have deleted part of the bill that would allow judges to decide whether defendants made good-faith efforts to “substantially comply” with health standards or guidance issued by authorities. If judges determine that good-faith efforts were made, lawsuits would be precluded from going forward. An attorney, Pizzo argued that the provision would make judges the arbiter of facts and not the arbiter of law.

Pizzo also proposed an amendment that would have deleted a requirement that plaintiffs prove by “clear and convincing evidence” that defendants were “at least grossly negligent.” The Pizzo amendment would have maintained a current standard for personal injury lawsuits, which is proof by a greater weight of the evidence.

The committee also rejected an amendment by Sen. Annette Taddeo, D-Miami, that would have mandated businesses that want to tap into the liability protections to post signs at entrances advising customers that the businesses are “not liable for transmission or exposure of COVID-19.”

“I think the consumer needs to know that they are walking into a location that is fulfilling all the parts of this bill to protect themselves from liability,” Taddeo said in support of her amendment. “And that’s all I am asking for: a sign at their door.”

While the Senate panel rejected all of the proposed amendments, the Senate bill is different from the House version for non-health care businesses. That’s because the House Judiciary Committee last month changed the House bill to make clear that if different guidelines and standards were in effect at the time plaintiffs were allegedly infected with COVID-19, businesses would only have needed to comply with one of the standards to get liability protections.

“Adding this to the Senate bill would perhaps add some clarity to this issue as the bill moves forward,” said Florida Restaurant & Lodging Association General Counsel Samantha Padgett.

While Republican leaders have made liability protections a top priority, critics noted that the state has not seen a flood of COVID-19-related lawsuits against businesses.

But proponents of the legislation argue that the numbers of lawsuits filed is misleading. William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, testified that he is aware of 53 potential lawsuits based on the number of presuit notices businesses have received.

National Federation of Independent Business lobbyist Tim Nungesser said the Senate bill would provide much-needed protections to businesses during the pandemic.

“I would submit to you this bill in front of you is a COVID-19 vaccine for small businesses,” Nungesser said. “We know that vaccines are meant to be given to folks to protect them so they don’t get sick. This bill in front of you protects small business owners so they don’t get sued in a frivolous way.”

But some critics argue that business groups have unsuccessfully pushed for lawsuit limitations for years and that the pandemic has made it convenient for lawmakers to grant them their wish.

Florida AFL-CIO lobbyist Rich Templin said local unions have been working with businesses since the beginning of the pandemic for worker protections. Sometimes the unions have been successful in getting businesses to agree to mask requirements and other safety steps, but sometimes they aren’t successful.

“We now have a bill that makes every lawsuit frivolous. This really doesn’t seem to be in the best interest of the working people,” Templin said. “There seems to be this assumption that lawyers are just evil devils and workers are just freeloaders looking to sue and the business community is just saints and angels. And that’s just not the reality of what we’re experiencing as advocates of working people each and every day.”

In passing HB 7005, members of the House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee tacked on three amendments, including one that altered the definition of a COVID-related claim to include variants and mutations of the virus.

Bill sponsor Colleen Burton, a Lakeland Republican who chairs the House Health & Human Services Committee, said staying safe during the COVID-19 pandemic has been a daunting task for everyone, but it has been more difficult for health care providers.

“Those who have been providing care and services under exceedingly difficult conditions deserve protections from frivolous lawsuits,” she said. “There’s a balancing act because patients and residents deserve protections from bad actors.”

The House committee also rejected a number of amendments proposed by Democrats, including a proposal by Rep. Fentrice Driskel, D-Tampa, to exclude from liability protections providers that had been cited by state or federal agencies for more than one infection-prevention and control deficiency in 2017, 2018 or 2019.

Driskell said she would be willing to alter the amendment but that the “basic concept here is we don’t want to protect the bad actors.”

Driskell’s proposal was opposed by the nursing home industry.

https://health.wusf.usf.edu/health-news-florida/2021-03-03/house-senate-show-differences-on-covid-19-liability-bills 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-03-03 15:50:172024-11-25 08:18:02House, Senate Show Differences On COVID-19 Liability Bills
Florida Justice Reform Institute

House, Senate Diverge On Bills For Health Care Provider COVID Lawsuits

February 9, 2021/in Florida Health News

 

Health News Florida

House, Senate Diverge On Bills For Health Care Provider COVID Lawsuits

Health News Florida | By Christine Sexton – News Service of Florida
Published February 9, 2021 at 8:30 AM EST

FL House

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed.

Lawmakers are poised this year to pass legislation to protect health care providers and other types of businesses from lawsuits related to COVID-19.

But while the House and Senate unveiled identical bills for non-health care businesses, their proposals aren’t the same when it comes to legal protections for long-term care providers, hospitals, physicians and other parts of the health care industry.

Chief among the differences are how long legal protections should be in effect, types of COVID-19-related lawsuits that would be limited and whether to require physician affidavits when lawsuits are filed.

A proposed bill (PCB HHS 21-01) the House unveiled Friday would make changes in how lawsuits are filed, including requiring the physician affidavits, but would rescind the changes “one year and one day” after they become effective.

By contrast, the Senate proposal (SB 74), filed by Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Brandes, R-St. Petersburg, would apply to COVID-19 lawsuits for injuries that occur up to one year after the end of a declared state or federal public health emergency, whichever is later.

The chambers also take different approaches to the types of COVID-19-related claims that would be limited.

The House bill would apply to medical claims filed against nursing homes and assisted living facilities, as well medical-malpractice claims. It also would apply to COVID-19 negligence cases that could be filed against numerous other types of health care providers, from physicians to federally qualified health centers to pharmacies and clinical laboratories.

The Senate bill, by contrast, defines COVID-19 lawsuits as claims, “whether pled as negligence, breach of contract or otherwise,” alleging that health care providers failed to follow clinical or government-issued health standards or guidance related to COVID-19; failed to properly interpret or apply the standards or guidance in providing health care, allocation of scarce resources, or assistance with daily living; or failed to follow government-issued health standards or guidance relating to infectious diseases if there were no applicable standards and guidance specific to COVID-19.

In another difference, the House proposal would lead to judges deciding whether defendants made a “good faith effort to substantially comply with any authoritative or controlling government-issued health standards or guidance at the time the cause of action accrued.” If judges determine such good-faith efforts were made, defendants would be immune from liability.

Despite the differences, health care lobbyists were quick to praise the House and Senate for the proposals.

“Lawsuits are not the remedy to ensuring high quality care — they simply divert precious resources away from our care centers and send a dangerous message to the health care heroes on the front lines — that the clinical, life-saving decisions they made to protect residents will be used against them,” Emmett Reed, president and chief executive officer of the Florida Health Care Association, said in a prepared statement after the release of the House proposal.

Reed’s association, the state’s largest nursing home industry group, issued similar praise when Brandes filed his bill.

Lawmakers will start the 2021 legislative session March 2, and lawsuit limits for health care providers and other types of businesses are a top priority for Republican leaders.

Chris Nuland , a Jacksonville attorney and lobbyist for physician groups, said both the House and Senate bills take steps to protect “health care heroes” from lawsuits stemming from the pandemic, which has killed 27,815 Florida residents, according to the latest state data.

Nuland praised the House’s proposal for specific inclusion of medical malpractice claims.

“This is an excellent piece of legislation. Should this pass, the health care providers who risked their lives treating patients, or were told they could not legally treat patients, would not be punished for doing the right thing,” Nuland said in a statement to The News Service of Florida.

There are some changes, however, physician associations would like to see in the House proposal.

“Ideally, the bill would not sunset in one year, as we have no idea how long this pandemic will last,” Nuland said of one of the potential changes to the measure.

Health care providers have been calling for protections from COVID-19-related lawsuits for nearly a year. The Florida Medical Association, the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association and the Florida Justice Reform Institute in March 2020 requested that Gov. Ron DeSantis issue an executive order protecting physicians from medical-malpractice lawsuits for care provided during the pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes quickly followed suit, sending a letter to the governor on April 3 asking for immunity from civil and criminal liability for “any harm or damages alleged to have been sustained as a result of an act or omission in the course of arranging for or providing health care services” during the pandemic.

Under the House’s proposal a plaintiff couldn’t file a COVID-19 lawsuit against a health care provider without first getting an affidavit from a state-licensed physician attesting that the claim was the result of the defendant’s actions. The Senate bill does not have such a requirement.

The affidavit requirement in the House bill is identical to one in the bills that would shield other types of businesses from COVID-19 liability. Those bills (HB 7 and SB 72) are being fast-tracked through legislative committees, but the affidavit requirement has drawn objections from House and Senate Democrats.

Florida Justice Reform Institute President William Large said the affidavit requirement mirrors those in laws governing how medical malpractice lawsuits are filed.

“We want to make sure it’s not taken away,.” said Large, whose business-backed group lobbies on a variety of issues aimed at limiting lawsuits.

While the House and Senate bills include differences, they also have similarities. As an example, both proposals would require plaintiffs to file complaints within one year after such things as a COVID-19 illnesses or deaths occur. If such a cause of action “accrued” before the legislation takes effect, the plaintiff would have one year to file a lawsuit.

https://health.wusf.usf.edu/health-news-florida/2021-02-09/house-senate-diverge-on-bills-for-health-care-provider-covid-lawsuits 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2021-02-09 15:50:042024-11-25 08:30:18House, Senate Diverge On Bills For Health Care Provider COVID Lawsuits
Florida Justice Reform Institute

Governor Backs Liability Protections Amid Pandemic

September 23, 2020/in Florida Health News

 

Health News Florida

Governor Backs Liability Protections Amid Pandemic
By CHRISTINE SEXTON – NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA • SEPTEMBER 23, 2020

DeSantis cabinet meeting Gov. Ron DeSantis’ remarks were welcomed by business groups that have been pushing him to provide lawsuit protections during the pandemic.
THE FLORIDA CHANNEL

Saying that fear of lawsuits is holding back the economy, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday said he supports placing limits on coronavirus-related litigation and is willing to consider such a bill during a potential special legislative session in November.

The comments marked the first time DeSantis has publicly supported limiting lawsuits for Florida businesses that are grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic.

DeSantis said the Legislature could consider a bill to give liability protections to “run-of-the-mill businesses” during a session that also could involve his plan to crack down on disorderly protesters. DeSantis unveiled the plan about protesters Monday and suggested Tuesday that a special session could be held when lawmakers return to Tallahassee for a Nov. 17 post-election organization session.

“There is a lot of concern about liability,” DeSantis said. “I believe it holds the economy back.”

The governor did not clearly explain what types of protections he would support, talking in sentence fragments when discussing the issues with reporters. 

““If you just have a store and someone … you cannot be held liable … first of all, how would you even prove someone was  …. so we’ve never done that with any other type of virus where you could be sued,” DeSantis said.

The governor said “there’s some stuff going on that’s a little different than run-of-the-mill business” that wouldn’t qualify for protections and mentioned clinical laboratories.

Attempts to limit lawsuits – an issue commonly known as tort reform – often spur fierce political battles in Tallahassee, with plaintiffs’ attorneys squaring off against business and health care groups. Opponents of such limits generally contend that they penalize people who are injured because of the actions of businesses or health-care providers.

DeSantis’ remarks were welcomed by business groups that have been pushing the governor to provide lawsuit protections during the pandemic. Businesses across the state closed down or scaled back in March and April to try to prevent the spread of COVID-19, with reopening efforts gradually starting in May.

“This is the first time I have heard the governor publicly support this, but I think he supports getting the economy open and getting everyone back to work,” said William Large, president of the Florida Justice Reform Institute, a business-backed group that lobbies on liability issues. “He’s a trailblazer in this respect. He is leading the way on the need to protect businesses from difficult causation lawsuits about how COVID-19 was transmitted. Businesses are in fear that if they open up they are going to be sued.”

Bill Herrle, executive director of the National Federation of Independent Business in Florida, also praised DeSantis.

“Business owners have been thrust into the role of being a public health officer. Every day they run their business they need to make decisions about whether Joe can come into work because he says that he’s not feeling well. Should we send Joe home?” said Herrle, whose group is made up of small businesses. “Or Joe comes in and says, ‘My wife, Mary, tested positive.’ So do we send Joe home? So it’s all those hundreds of day-to-day decisions. It is, but it’s not, alone, just the concern for exposure to liability for having caused someone to contract COVID. It’s all the hundreds of decisions we make that are being driven by COVID as well. So we are very happy to see him do this.”

DeSantis said he thought the liability issue would be settled by the federal government as part of a COVID-19 relief package. But Congress has been bogged down and unable to reach a deal on new legislation. 

“The grand bargain was supposed to be liability protection for business and then aid to states,” DeSantis said. “The Dems wanted aid to states, and the Republicans wanted liability. But that hasn’t happened.”

Following DeSantis’ remarks, Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis late Tuesday issued a statement outlining what he identified as his three guiding principles for liability protections. 

https://health.wusf.usf.edu/post/governor-backs-liability-protections-amid-pandemic#stream/0 

https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/fjri-news.jpg 800 800 RAD Tech https://www.fljustice.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Florida-Justice-Reform-Institute.jpg RAD Tech2020-09-23 15:52:072024-12-11 17:48:02Governor Backs Liability Protections Amid Pandemic
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